
“Hey hey! Ho ho! We want clean energy and we want it
today!”
It was made-for-TV outside and in CPS Energy’s downtown
offices as dozens of protestors from Austin to Kingsville pumped up and
down the street chanting, waving signs. They drew many honks of support
from passing motorists and guarded stares from commuters at the
opposing bus stop. The television cameras divided the turf and devoured
the spectacle. But what worked for cameras in the street
didn’t do so well indoors after TV crews abandoned the color
shot to stake out positions inside the meeting room.
Upon entering the building, the protestors were stopped at the front
desk. Though many had already signed up to address the board about
their concern over CPS plans to invest in two new
nuclear-power plants, the group found themselves instead
being directed to a corner of the front hall where they were expected
to observe piped-in proceedings on television. The meeting room, they
were told, was full. They erupted.
About 30 minutes of bullhorn-enhanced chanting created a buzz in the
boardroom, but only after the group rushed the double doors beyond the
security stile did it get serious.
The suits had just finished praising years of faithful service and were
preparing to talk pollution control devices when a security guard
rushed into the chambers and slipped the deadbolt behind. Then came the
muffled sound of pounding.
On the other side, CPS security officer Dan Akeroyd braced his leg
against the first set of double doors. He joked about his new job
description (official doorstop) before signaling to a colleague to
phone the San Antonio PD.
“Are those the crazies from Austin?” asks a CPS
employee. Another, clutching a minutes-old board award, asks after
alternative exits, visibly shaken. “I’m not sure
I’d get through there alive,” he says, as
he’s escorted down a side hallway.
While a few “Austin crazies” peppered the bunch,
the majority of these excluded are from San Anto. Others had driven up
from Goliad and Kingsville, where uranium
mining has already claimed the drinkability of several water
wells.
“Let the CPS employees out, so the people can come
in!” comes the repeated request from the other side.
As SAPD and Parks Police arrive, the utility’s deputy general
manager appears with an offer: space in the media room adjoining the
chambers with a complete view of the meeting, “But
y’all have got to promise to behave,” says Steve Bartley.
Then as the nukes are taken up there is a long chain of objections to
the utility’s plans (and a couple proud endorsements thrown
in by the likes of the local manufacturer’s association)
before the board disappears upstairs to, presumably, grant the masses
the appearance of deliberations. Two hours and counting…
“Hey hey. Ho ho.”
Update, 7 pm: Board reports unanimous vote in favor of first of what will be many b/millions for the doubling of San Anto's nuke plant.
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